Open Educational Resources (OER) are freely accessible, usually openly licensed documents and media that are useful for teaching, learning, educational, assessment and research purposes. Open Educational Resources include learning content, tools and

Licenses: Intellectual property licenses to promote open publishing of materials, design-principles, and localization of content.

The benefits of OER are:

Creating OER lowers the cost of educational materials.

Continuous improvement in quality

Sharing and modifying learning content for special use.

Develops innovative.

In this article, we’ve come up with OER tools which help educators to enrich their classroom practice with better learning resources. Let’s learn about them.

EDUCAUSE:

EDUCAUSE is a nonprofit association and the foremost community of IT leaders and professionals dedicated to advancing higher education. It provides higher education professionals, students and parents with a better community platform to exchange their expertise. EDUCAUSE’s library aggregates over 24,000 resources (Analytics, E-Textbooks & MOOCs) submitted by EDUCAUSE, EDUCAUSE Center for Analysis and Research (ECAR), EDUCAUSE Learning Initiative (ELI), Higher Education Information Security Council (HEISC), Grant programs and other members.

Open Class:

OpenClass is an amazing learning environment that’s open, easy, and completely free. It helps educators bring social learning and interactive experiences to their students. OpenClass allows users to select from exceptional OER content like video and more from The Khan Academy, Ted-Ed, and YouTube EDU, along with others that use the Creative Commons license. It has many tools for educators to create, manage and share content & also for students to learn socially.

Google in Education:

Google provides all educators with tools and solutions to improve teaching and learning. Refer to training and support resources which help you make the most of technology in the classroom. Google education allows students to explore their passions and discover new ones by getting involved. It allows users to share their work through blogger, YouTube, google docs and many more. It also offers scholarships for students. Their main aim is to provide learners with open learning content any time, any where and on any device.

WikiEducator:

WikiEducatoris an evolving community intended for the following tasks:

The Open University is the United Kingdom’s university dedicated to distance learning. They allow their content to be accessible to all and provides hours of content freely available via. YouTube, iTunes U and OpenLearn, much of which can be reused in a way that benefits you. It has a huge community to spread the content online.

OLAT:

OLAT (Online Learning and Training) is an Open Source LMS (Learning Management System) tailored to the needs of Universities and Higher Education institutions.There are approximately 70',000 users and nearly 50 institutions in Switzerland using OLAT (with up to 5,000 courses and millions of resources), and the numbers keep on growing!

Canvas:

Canvas engages students in learning anytime, anywhere and support 1:1 and other technology initiatives both in and outside the classroom. It also defines course, curriculum and certification paths, including pre-test and post-test assessment tracks. Canvas allows users to easily access and insert audio, video, text, images and more on every learning contact point.

Commonwealth of Learning:

Commonwealth of Learning involves in the creation of open educational resources. It provides schools with materials under the Creative Commons license agreement to support independent study in 17 specially selected secondary school subjects.

SchoolTool:

SchoolTool is an open source, web-based student information system designed for schools in the developing world, with strong support for translation, localization and automated deployment and updates via. The Ubuntu Linux installer and package management system.

The above mentioned are the few OER tools we’ve selected to let you know about. There are many more tools like these. We hope this information useful for you to get free learning content. If you know a few more useful tools like these, please share with us in the comment box. img src

EdTechReview (ETR) is a community of and for everyone involved in education technology to connect and collaborate both online and offline to discover, learn, utilize and share about the best ways technology can improve learning, teaching, and leading in the 21st century.

EdTechReview spreads awareness on education technology and its role in 21st century education through best research and practices of using technology in education, and by facilitating events, training, professionaldevelopment, and consultation in its adoption and implementation.

I find every news, reviews very informative and interesting. This site is indeed a great site for both teachers and learners. Thanks to EdTech for creating such an enriching site on education. Hats off!!

- Regin Brown, Educationist and Blogger, United Kingdom

My group likes this site because it's so up-to-date and has tons of relevant articles.

- Angela Giuliano, Teacher, New Mexico

Your write ups and articles ignites the minds making them receptive to the whole new wealth of EdTech.

- Jagat Rana, Parent, India

EdTechReview has some great resources for teachers who need to get some ideas about technology in the classroom.

- Loretta Wideman,Teacher, East Africa

EdTechReview keeps educators up to date with trending tech savvy terms relative to the discipline.

- Dr. Ingrid Rizzolo,Education Professional, Curriculum and Instruction Designer, New York City Area